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Three scores is equal to three times twenty, which is sixty years.
Three and a half years.
Being rich and famous....
three quarters of a century
1,095 days is three years.
H. Grant Scarfe has written several books, including "The Brain and Behavior: An Introduction to Behavioral Neuroanatomy" and "World War II in the Pacific: An Encyclopedia". He is known for his works in the fields of neuroscience and military history.
There have been several famous African-American poets throughout the years including Maya Angelou and Langston Hughes. Some other examples are Alice Walker and Etheridge Knight.
http://www.whosaliveandwhosdead.com
George Wilbur Meyer has written: 'Wordsworth's formative years' -- subject(s): Biography, Childhood and youth, English Poets
2347623 years
Tres anos que hablo espanol in English means It has been three years that I speak Spanish.
This person served three years in reform school for attempted burglary before writing many famous rock-and-roll songs
Peter Quennell has written: 'Baudelaire and the symbolists' 'The marble foot' -- subject(s): Biography, Authors, English, English Authors 'Romantic England' -- subject(s): English Painting, English literature, History, History and criticism, Romanticism, Romanticism in art 'Byron in Italy' -- subject(s): Homes and haunts, Poets, English, Biography, Intellectual life, British, History, English Poets 'The profane virtues' -- subject(s): Biography, Intellectual life, History 'Memoirs of William Hickey' 'Mayhew's London Underworld (Century Lives and Letters)' 'Byron - The Years of Fame' 'Sympathy and other stories' 'Alexander Pope; the education of genius, 1688-1728' -- subject(s): Knowledge and learning, Poets, English, Childhood and youth, Biography, English Poets 'Romantic England: writing and painting, 1717-1851' -- subject(s): English literature, History and criticism, Painting, English, Romanticism in art, Romanticism, History, English Painting 'The pursuit of happiness' -- subject(s): Happiness in literature, Literature, Happiness in art, History and criticism, Happiness 'Caroline of England' -- subject(s): History, Court and courtiers, Great Britain, Biography, Queens 'Who's who in Shakespeare' 'The Colosseum' 'Byron' -- subject(s): Poets, English, Biography, English Poets 'Victorian panorama' -- subject(s): Costume, History, Photography, Pictorial works, Social life and customs 'John Ruskin' 'Mayhew's London Underground'
Stephen Hawking
triennium (concise oxford English dictionary)
Thomas Hardy, Robert Bridges, Austin Dobson and David Herbert Lawrence were actively engaged in writing English Poetry during the years 1914-18. A few other famous poets also were there, of whom Rupert Brooke and James Elroy Flecker passed away in 1915 and Edward Thomas in 1917. But if one is looking for war poetry of that period, it is good to read Wilfred Owen who passed away exactly in 1918 while in action.
There are actually three English poets who wrote literary essays. The first in this category was Dr. Samuel Johnson, simply called 'The Dictionary Johnson". He wrote many of his poems in The Gentleman's Magazine, of which the most famous was 'London' the theme being the corruption of a city. In this magazine and in The Rambler which he found later, his faculties as an essayist and literary critic gained momentum which culminated in his monumental work The Lives Of The Poets, which assessed the lives and works of fifty two poets. The second personage is Matthew Arnold, the famous son of the famous father Dr.Thomas Arnold, the Rugby Public School headmaster. The most famous among his poems are Rugby Chapel, The Forsaken Merman, Thyrsis, Sohrab and Rustum and The Scholar Gypsy. During the later years we see him as a literary critic, the first major work being Essays in Criticism, which contained a Study of Poetry and evaluation of the works of Milton, Gray, Keats, Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley and Tolstoy. Culture and Anarchy, Literature and Dogma and Discources followed. The third was Alexander Pope, who though not considered as a literary critic and essayist, was a born literary critic of such a sharp acerbic nature that he wrote his essays of criticism in the poetical form. Many of his famous poems are nothing but pure literary essays in which rather than mentioning the actual names, he prefered to leave the exact number of dashes, which in due cource were duly filled up by his contemporaries.